Cazuela de Vacuno

Cazuela de Vacuno

The Chilean Sunday-lunch one-pot, the soup-stew that turns up on every kitchen table from Santiago to Patagonia. You brown bone-in beef shin to colour, then drop it into a simple broth of onion, garlic, oregano and cumin and simmer slowly for ninety minutes until the meat is tender and the broth has built depth. The vegetables go in for the last twenty-five minutes - a thick chunk of pumpkin, a section of corn-on-the-cob, a whole potato, a handful of green beans - each piece kept whole because the cazuela is meant to arrive in the bowl looking like a still life. Rice or vermicelli cooks separately in a ladle of the broth and joins at the very end. Served in deep bowls with chopped coriander and a wedge of lime, the steam rising while you eat. Comfort food at its plainest and deepest.

Chilean 2 hours 15 minutes Serves4
Mathloutha

Mathloutha

The Saudi gathering platter built for the night when one cut of meat isn't enough. Three proteins share the same pot: lamb shoulder and beef chunks go in first with a kabsa-spiced tomato base for ninety minutes of slow simmer until they're meltingly tender, then chicken pieces drop in for the last thirty-five minutes (their cook time is shorter, so they go in later). The strained meat broth, deeply spiced from everything that has braised in it, becomes the cooking liquid for basmati scented with saffron and dried lime. At the end you arrange all three meats on top of the rice in the same platter and bring the whole thing to the centre of the table. The kind of dish you make for a wedding lunch, an Eid gathering, or the night the extended family arrives unannounced.

Arabian 3 hours Serves8
Sichuan Hot Pot

Sichuan Hot Pot

Two pots if you have them: a spicy red broth and a clear chicken broth. The red broth fries doubanjiang and chilli bean paste in beef tallow, adds Sichuan peppercorns, dried chillies, star anise, cassia, bay, ginger and garlic, then stock; simmers for 30 minutes. Diners cook their own ingredients in the simmering pot and dip in a small bowl of sesame oil + chopped garlic + coriander. The mala (numbing-hot) sensation comes from green Sichuan peppercorns + dried chilli together.

Chinese 1 hour 30 minutes Serves4-6
Tafelspitz

Tafelspitz

The Habsburg Sunday lunch, said to have been Emperor Franz Joseph's favourite dish, and still the proper-occasion centrepiece of any Viennese family table. You poach a whole 1.5 kg piece of beef rump cap very gently for two and a half to three hours in a stock built around onions, root vegetables and marrow bones, until the meat is fork-tender but still sliceable. The technique is the opposite of a roast: no browning, no sear, all the flavour pulled out gently into the broth and held in the slow-cooking beef. Two courses come from the one pot. The clarified broth comes to the table first, scattered with chives and served with semolina dumplings or the fine pancake strips called Frittaten. Then the beef itself is sliced and presented with apple-horseradish sauce, a sharp green chive sauce, crisp pan-roasted Bratkartoffeln and creamed spinach. A glass of cool grüner veltliner alongside; Sunday afternoon in front of you.

Austrian 3 hours 20 minutes Serves6